Showing posts with label Alzheimer's Disease. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alzheimer's Disease. Show all posts

Saturday, December 25, 2010

This week's compendium

Here’s this week’s compendium – slightly longer than usual, to mark the last compendium of 2010. This week…

1. my cyberfriend Wordsmith sent me a link to a really good Alzheimer’s article in the NYT [1]. Thanks, mate.

2. a later, equally interesting NYT article focuses on the morality of Alzheimer’s screening in people with few or no dementia symptoms, given that so far there’s no effective treatment [2]. A quandary indeed.

3. the journal blood reported that a stem cell transplant produced an HIV cure [3]. I think there’ll be lots more stem cell transplant success in coming years.

4. the Annals of Internal Medicine reported that Echinacea produced only a minor (i.e. statistically insignificant) reduction in common cold severity or duration [4]. Ho hum.

5. Hepburn Wind’s two turbines are en route from Germany on the SE Panthea [5a]. (Click on ‘Current Vessel’s Track’ (left sidebar) to see its current position.) Slightly too early for transport on a high tech carbon neutral cargo ship – due to begin service in 2012 [5b].

6. the FIA’s World Motor Sport Council approved engine changes for F1 – downsizing from eight to four cylinders – starting in 2013 [6]. Fuel consumption will be 35% less. I reckon the reason for this change is financial and not environmental.

7. Nutrition Diva said there’s no reason not to drink water during meals [7]. Doing so promotes satiety and thus assists weight loss.

8. Grammar Girl published a list of the four most frequent grammar questions put to her in 2010 [8]. Fascinating.

9. US researchers found that happiness increases creativity [9]. And creativity increases happiness. So it’s a positive feedback loop.

10. and because happiness and creativity are both linked to physical fitness, here are the latest US [10a] and Aussie [10b] physical activity guidelines. Brisk walking for 150 minutes per week is all it takes, folks.

Finally, I wish you, dear Farmdoc’s Blog readers, a wonderful week.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Stop and think about dementia today

This Farmdoc’s Blog post’s close to my heart. Today’s mid-way through National Dementia Awareness Week [1]. And, whether deliberate or coincidential, yesterday was World Alzheimer’s Day [2, 3]. Alzheimer’s is but one type of dementia, but the highest profile one. Its continuing rising prevalence has major implications for individuals, families, communities and nations. World Alzheimer’s Day was initiated by Alzheimer’s Disease International in 1994. It’s a day when people and NGOs world-wide raise public awareness, via the media, of the devastating effects of Alzheimer’s [4]. This year’s theme is ‘Dementia: it’s time for action’. I think the difficulties faced by the family of a each person with Alzheimer’s must be appreciated by carers and governments. Much Alzheimer’s research is being done world-wide, but to date there’s no confirmed cause and so no effective prevention or treatment. Increased research on both these topics must be funded. Given the ageing of Western populations, unless effective prevention and treatment can be discovered and implemented, Alzheimer’s will have dire manpower and resource implications for health budgets already under huge pressure. The NYT recently published this review of Alzheimer’s [5] which I found more informative than any review I’ve read in medical journals. I can’t bid you ‘Happy National Dementia Awareness Week’ or ‘Happy World Alzheimer’s Day’. But today at least, stop and think about dementia. And if you’re not personally touched by it, spare a thought for those who are.